excerpt from 'The Life of Thomas Cooper, Written by Himself' pp. 315 (83 words)

excerpt from 'The Life of Thomas Cooper, Written by Himself' pp. 315 (83 words)

part of

The Life of Thomas Cooper, Written by Himself

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

315

type

text excerpt

encoded value

During the stirring year of 1848, I kept on at my lecturing work, on Sunday evenings, at the John Street Institution.  I had large audiences, to listen to history and foreign and home politics, mingled with moral instruction.  One great charm of these evenings, for myself, was the music.  There was a good organ, and I strove to direct the taste of the choir to Handel and Mozart and Haydn and Beethoven; and the result was that we soon had some thorough good chorus-singing.

appears in search results as

excerpt from 'The Life of Thomas Cooper, Written by Himself' pp. 315 (83 words)

1660565975629:

reported in source

1660565975629

documented in
Page data computed in 325 ms with 1,642,480 bytes allocated and 35 SPARQL queries executed.